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Parkinson’s disease (PD) is among the most common neurodegenerative conditions, and it is characterized by the progressive loss of dopaminergic neurons and a great variability in clinical expression. Despite several effective medications, it still causes disability as all patients show treatment-resistant symptoms and complications.
A possible reason for this therapeutic-burden and great clinical variability lies in a probable misconception about its pathophysiology, one that focuses on neurodegeneration, while largely neglecting its functional consequences and the related compensatory changes. In this thesis, I expand on the hypothesis that some PD symptoms have a dysfunctional origin and reflect derangements of neural network dynamics, the means by which brain coordination supports any motor behaviour. In particular, I have investigated resting tremor and freezing of gait, two common symptoms with an enigmatic mechanism and suboptimal management.
In the case of tremor, I predicted a pathological change in response to dopamine loss, which included the activation of noradrenergic (NA) neurons of the locus coeruleus (LC) projecting to the cerebellum. This compensatory LC activation that supports dopaminergic neurons might indeed come at the expense of tremor development. To assess the role of LC-NA in tremor development, I recorded tremor occurrence in the reserpinized rat model of PD, one of very few showing tremor, after selective lesioning (with the neurotoxin DSP-4) of the LC-NA terminal axons. DSP-4 induced a severe reduction of LC-NA terminal axons in the cerebellar cortex and this was associated with a significant reduction in tremor development. Unlike its development, tremor frequency and the akinetic rigid signs did not differ between the groups, thus suggesting a dopaminergic dependency. These findings suggest that the LC-NA innervation of the cerebellum has a critical role for PD tremor, possibly by exerting a network effect, which gates the cerebello-thalamic-cortical circuit into pathological oscillations upon a dopaminergic loss in the basal ganglia.
In contrast, for the study of freezing of gait, I worked with human PD subjects and deep brain stimulation, a therapeutic neuromodulation device that in some prototypes also allows the recording of neural activity in freely-moving subjects. Gait freezing is a disabling PD symptom that suddenly impairs effective stepping, thus causing falls and disability. Also in this study, I hypothesized that the underlying pathophysiology may be represented by dysfunctional neural network dynamics that abruptly impair locomotor control by affecting the communication in the supraspinal locomotor network. To test this hypothesis, I investigated the coupling between the cortex and the subthalamic nucleus, two main nodes of the supraspinal locomotor network, in freely-moving subjects PD patients and also performed molecular brain imaging of striatal dopamine receptor density and kinematic measurements. I found that in PD patients, walking is associated with cortical-subthalamic stable coupling in a low-frequency band (i.e. θ-α rhythms). In contrast, these structures decoupled when gait freezing occurred in the brain hemisphere with less dopaminergic innervation. These findings suggest that freezing of gait is a “circuitopathy”, with dysfunctional cortical-subcortical communication.
Altogether the results of my experiments support the hypothesis that the pathophysiology of PD goes beyond neurodegenerative (loss-of-function) processes and that derangement of neural network dynamics coincides with some disabling PD symptoms, thus suggesting that PD can be interpreted as the combination of multiple circuitopathies.
Deterioration of gait and alterations of physiological gait initiation contribute significantly to the burden of disease in Parkinson's disease. This paper systematically investigates disease-specific alterations during the postural phases of gait initiation and demonstrates the influence of dopaminergic networks by assessing levodopa mediated improvements in motor performance and correlation of motor behavior with loss of striatal and cortical dopaminergic neurons. Particular attention is given to known confounders such as initial stance and anthropometrics.
Ziel der Studie war, phosphoryliertes und trunkiertes Alpha-Synuclein in Nervenfasern der Haut zu untersuchen und herauszufinden, ob die posttranslationalen Modifikationen Phosphorylierung und Trunkierung des Alpha-Synucleins als potenzielle Biomarker für eine Diagnosestellung des M. Parkinson geeignet sind. Die Besonderheit der vorliegenden Studie war zum einen, dass ausschließlich Patienten in frühen Erkrankungsstadien (Hoehn-und-Yahr-Stadien I und II) des idiopathischen M. Parkinson untersucht wurden und zum anderen der Versuch, die Detektionsrate anhand von Stufenschnitten zu erhöhen.
Zusammenfassend kann man sagen, dass phosphoryliertes Alpha-Synuclein ein hohes Potenzial als Biomarker für die Diagnosestellung und zur Differenzialdiagnostik eines M. Parkinson hat und Stufenschnitte die Nachweisrate deutlich erhöhen können.
In der Immunfluoreszenzdoppelfärbung mit dem Anti-Phospho-Alpha-Synuclein-Antikörper von BioLegend® (San Diego, USA) konnte bei beinahe 80% der Patienten das gesuchte Protein gefunden werden (Nachweisrate Hoehn-und-Yahr-Stadium I: 58,3%; Hoehn-und-Yahr-Stadium II: 93,8%), in der Immunfluoreszenzdoppelfärbung mit dem Anti-Phospho-Alpha-Synuclein-Antikörper von Prothena Biosciences Inc (San Francisco, USA) nur in etwas mehr als 46% der Patienten (Nachweisrate Hoehn-und-Yahr-Stadium I: 41,7%; Hoehn-und-Yahr-Stadium II: 50%).
In Hoehn-und-Yahr-Stadium I ist die Sensitivität jedoch noch nicht ausreichend hoch. Da insbesondere in frühen Stadien der Erkrankung eine Differenzierung zwischen atypischen Parkinson-Syndromen und idiopathischem M. Parkinson klinisch sehr schwierig ist, ist jedoch vor allem das frühdiagnostische Potential eines Biomarkers entscheidend. In Hoehn-und-Yahr-Stadium I müsste die Detektionsrate noch erhöht werden, um einen sinnvollen Einsatz des Biomarkers Phospho-Alpha-Synuclein in der Klinik gewährleisten zu können.
Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites are neuropathological hallmarks of Parkinson’s disease (PD). These depositions in the brain mostly consist of aggregated α-synuclein (α-syn) phosphorylated at Ser129. A number of studies reported detection of phosphorylated α-syn (p-α-syn) in the dermal nerve fibers in Parkinson’s disease. The objective of this study was to investigate whether pathological α-syn accumulations detected in the skin represent aggregated protein. A number of methods aimed at detecting α-syn oligomers and aggregates were first tested and optimized on the brain samples in PD and normal control. These methods included proximity ligation assay (PLA), PET-blot, immunohistochemical (IHC) stains with α-syn aggregate (5G4) or oligomer specific (ASyO5) antibodies and a stain against native α-syn (syn211) after proteinase K (PK) digestion. Subsequently, the most specific methods (stains with 5G4, ASyO5 and syn211 after PK digestion) were studied in two separate patient and control cohorts. Anti-p-α-syn stain was performed in parallel.
Single sections from at least 2 biopsy sites from 44 patients and 22 controls (cohort 1) as well as serial sections of 4 biopsy sites from 27 patients and 5 controls (cohort 2) were systematically studied for presence of aggregated and oligomeric α-syn. In total, 5G4 positive deposits were found in 24% (cohort 1) and 37% (cohort 2), ASyO5 positive lesions in 17,7% (cohort 1) and 33% (cohort 2), syn211 positive lesions after PK digestion in 38,7% (cohort 1) and 48% (cohort 2) of cases. There was a major overlap among positivity for a particular staining on the patient level and in most cases, the same nerve fiber was found to be positive for all 4 markers in neighboring sections. Among the skin biopsies which contained p-α-syn accumulation, 59% were also PK resistant, 41% were 5G4 positive and 45% were ASyO5 positive. The samples belonging to normal controls did not show any positive signal in either of the newly established stainings or in the anti-p-α-syn staining.
Using 3 distinct IHC methods, α-syn oligomers and aggregates were detectable in the majority of p-α-syn positive skin biopsies. This finding supports the hypothesis that α-syn aggregation occurs in the peripheral (i.e. dermal) nerves and can be specifically detected using skin biopsy.